When Noah Wyle’s Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch ended the first season of The Pitt with an emotional meltdown followed by a heart-to-heart with Shawn Hatosy’s Dr. Abbot on the roof and Abbot offering to connect Robby with his therapist, some sort of mental health treatment seemed like it would be on the horizon for season two.
But, in an exchange with Christopher Thornton’s Dr. Caleb Jefferson in episode four, viewers learn that conventional therapy hasn’t really been working for Robby, as he says the last two people he saw weren’t his “speed” and that his upcoming motorcycle-trip sabbatical is the only sort of “zoom therapy” he’s interested in.
“He’s coming up against what a lot of physicians face, which is it’s really hard for a doctor to be a patient,” Wyle told The Hollywood Reporter…
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